Tories will win by 200+ seats. Now they are no longer an EU party I am happy to vote for them.Commie Corbyn's Labour will shout a lot about the NHS which they messed up with debt, and be annihilated.Minor Fart will continue the decline of Limp Dims but take a few Remoaner votes from Liebore.UKIP will discover that their new raison d'etre is to take votes off Labour. But still get no MPs.Watermelons (green on the outside red on the inside) will call everyone nazis, whilst calling for everything to be banned and have greater state control.Scottish Natsi Party will say "oi yoooo English bastaaarrd, it's all your fault", lose seats to Tories but still beat McScottishLabour.Northern Ireland will be a 52-48 split along Loyalist/fenian divide.The Bus Pass Elvis Party will beat the Lib Dims again.Remember, voting is not about the industry of 30 years ago, who your parents vote for, what your favourite colour is, the US president or what the BBC say. It's about you, this country, now. Vote wisely.

Labour are incapable of winning an election, because they are too radical and divided under Corbyn and because with them not able to count on getting the 50 or so Scottish MP's they used to get before SNP took over in Scotland, they will never get a majority. Good call by May to call a snap election, the only downside is that Labour won't keep Corbyn after they lose the election.

She knows Labour will drag every bit of Brexit negotiation as much as they can under the guise of it 'not being the Brexit people voted for'. Now they have to contest a general election in eight weeks with a massively unpopular leader with an equally unpopular message, party infighting and a complete lack of charisma or gravitas. If anything they'll lose votes to the Lib Dems, who themselves are pretty much irrelevant these days.

UKIP has lost most of it's steam after the referendum, the SNP can win Scotland with little impact on the Brexit negotiations and so the Conservatives get a clear mandate to push things through.

I'm far from a die-hard Tory, but given a choice between May, Corbyn or Fallon I know who I'd back to run the country.

_________________

Jazz Maverick wrote:

If I win the 50/50 draw I'm going to use the money to pay a tramp to throw dog s*** at you.

This election could be the most one sided elections for many a year. All the marginal seats being talked about are labour seats not conservative one's that labour need to win to win the election. Bet Jenny Chapman will be a bit worried about holding her seat.

She knows Labour will drag every bit of Brexit negotiation as much as they can under the guise of it 'not being the Brexit people voted for'. Now they have to contest a general election in eight weeks with a massively unpopular leader with an equally unpopular message, party infighting and a complete lack of charisma or gravitas. If anything they'll lose votes to the Lib Dems, who themselves are pretty much irrelevant these days.

UKIP has lost most of it's steam after the referendum, the SNP can win Scotland with little impact on the Brexit negotiations and so the Conservatives get a clear mandate to push things through.

I'm far from a die-hard Tory, but given a choice between May, Corbyn or Fallon I know who I'd back to run the country.

Reminder that your voting for your local MP, not leader of the country.A mistake loads of people keep saying. "I can't vote for Corbyn" , good news is that your not . (Unless you live in his constituency of course )

Reminder that your voting for your local MP, not leader of the country.A mistake loads of people keep saying. "I can't vote for Corbyn" , good news is that your not . (Unless you live in his constituency of course )

Reminder that your voting for your local MP, not leader of the country.A mistake loads of people keep saying. "I can't vote for Corbyn" , good news is that your not . (Unless you live in his constituency of course )

Aye but the overall results determine who will become the next Prime Minister, so technically you're voting for both.

Labour's problems can be shown by my daughter-in-law. She is eligible to vote for the first time and hates Theresa May, blames her for everything that she perceives is going wrong with the country. But she won't vote at the General Election, as she doesn't think Labour has any chance, so won't waste her time voting. I can see the vote being down significantly as Labour voters don't bother to vote, so leading to a Tory landslide victory.

Labour's problems can be shown by my daughter-in-law. She is eligible to vote for the first time and hates Theresa May, blames her for everything that she perceives is going wrong with the country. But she won't vote at the General Election, as she doesn't think Labour has any chance, so won't waste her time voting. I can see the vote being down significantly as Labour voters don't bother to vote, so leading to a Tory landslide victory.

I assume you've explained to her how stupid she is?

Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk

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On Sunday April 29, 2012 at 10:25 pm, Darlo Cockney wrote:

Sadly some people have nothing better to do that invent rumours.

We will be playing at the arena again next season - fact.

Quakerz - if you actually attended games and spoke to people you might actually find our facts, rather than spreading s*** on this board.

But she won't vote at the General Election, as she doesn't think Labour has any chance, so won't waste her time voting.

It wouldn't take much time though, ..... she must be a very very busy person.

_________________Mr Singh said this " I'm not expecting to get back any of the money I've already put in, I'm prepared to write it off for the future of the club. I'm not hanging in to make any kind of financial gain in the short or long term - if someone was prepared to come in and take the club off my hands, I'd be more than willing to discuss it"

I see the latest odds on which party will win the most seats in the next parliament, has the tories at 1/16 on and labour at 10/1.

tbf given the situation you might as well pile on the Tories...is there really that much risk? Not particularly generous odds from a labour perspective.

There's always an element of risk though. Remember that business lady who bet £50k or £70k betting on us staying in Europe, when the Brexit vote happened? Plus you'd have to bet £16 just to win £1, as you say not very generous odds.

Not a good night for Labour in the local elections as they lose a whole raft of councillors and a few councils, with many more to declare. It'll be interesting to see how the mayoral election goes in the Tees Valley, which should clearly be a strong labour hold, but we'll see.

Progressive politics needs a collective rethink. They are all over the place and haven't come up with an answer to issues around the world which are concerning people.

It's simply not good enough to blame and label people for not agreeing with them and that is all I see on social media at the moment.

There was something I was considering the other day about the living wage foundation (happen to know someone who works there who plasters stuff all over about employers should be giving a living wage) and it is a constant barrage of blame attached to business owners with seemingly no consideration around the actual cost and impact that sort of change could have.

I was thinking -it's proposed that everyone gets paid at least £10 per hour. But all the people on £10 an hour now or higher, will want to keep their differential rate because they've worked hard and trained to get it. I mean what's the point in training to be a Joiner if you get paid similar to an unskilled labourer?

So ALL workers will get a big pay rise thus making everything we buy or do more expensive - probably negating the benefits of getting the pay rise in the first place.

Maybe ??

_________________Mr Singh said this " I'm not expecting to get back any of the money I've already put in, I'm prepared to write it off for the future of the club. I'm not hanging in to make any kind of financial gain in the short or long term - if someone was prepared to come in and take the club off my hands, I'd be more than willing to discuss it"